Wednesday, August 31, 2016

I am writing this mostly for my non-rescue friends, to essentially
beg them to consider making a tax-deductible donation to Diabetic Cats
In Need. Here's the link, and my story follows. https://www.youcaring.com/dcin-634283

Doing rescue is hard under any circumstances. For those of you who
don't rescue, it's really difficult to describe how hard it is. In the
overwhelming vast majority of cases, you are working against the clock.
And when time's up, the cat dies. Dead. No do-overs. That life is
gone. So the first thing I want my non-rescue friends to understand is
the enormous amount of stress involved in rescue.

Now - take the
date-with-death cat in question and make her older (even harder) and
give her a special medical need (harder still). this brings us to
today's story, which is about Mittie (pictured).

Because I'm
known to do senior and special needs rescue, I immediately get the plea
when an older diabetic cat turns up at a public shelter. The first
thing you need to know is that from the moment that plea goes out to the
rescue community, that cat typically has 48-72 hours to get out of the
shelter. Not a lot of time. So the clock is ticking, and there's a
short time horizon. That's how it was for Mittie. She was surrendered
to the shelter for peeing outside of the box (common with untreated
diabetics, but yet another strike against finding rescue). She was
diagnosed as diabetic on urinalysis at the shelter. And she was 12
years old at the time of surrender. Strike, strike, strike.

There are a few things that are needed in short order to get a cat like Mittie rescued:

1. A local foster who can pull and hold the cat.
2. A sponsoring rescue to act as a safety net under the cat.
3. A sponsoring rescue who can commit to whatever medical needs the cat
encounters - and with an older cat with special needs, this is no small
commitment.
4. An adopter, who is often out of state.
5. Transport to the adopter, who is often out of state.

And remember - all of this has to happen in a short time window.

In Mittie's case, she was blessed with #1 and #4 within 24 hours of the plea going out. Kris Northrup,
despite having no diabetic experience, agreed to foster her provided
she had rescue under her and could be trained to test her and care for
her. I committed to the training and supplies needed to care for a
diabetic cat, and went over to Kris' and brought her what she needed and
showed her what she needed to do two days after Mittie was rescued. Cathy Woods
had already stepped up to adopt Mittie (she is out of state, FYI). So
our immediate concern was #2 and #3, all while #5 needed to be assembled
and addressed.

That's where Diabetic Cats in Need (DCIN) came
in. Knowing that we had both a foster and an adopter (and that
transport could be worked out one way or another), I messaged Jenna Marie Watts and Amy Sikes
of DCIN and asked if they could be the sponsoring rescue and commit to
Mittie's veterinary needs until she could be transported to the adopter.
Without hesitation, Jenna agreed.

Now let me digress here for a
moment. When DCIN committed to Mittie, they did so sight unseen.
Remember - Mittie is a senior with an unknown health status who showed
glucose in her urine. The point here is that most of these shelter
diabetics come in without having received proper or appropriate
veterinary care for a lengthy period of time. Committing to their
veterinary needs financially is a total leap of faith, and one that can
get expensive. Yet DCIN didn't hesitate. They knew Mittie's time was
short and we had to get her out of the shelter ASAP.

And so,
Kris picked her up and I taught her how to test blood glucose. Mittie's
blood sugar has been mildly elevated but not at the level where she
needs insulin, though we were ready for that - DCIN provides not only
veterinary care but also test kits and supplies and insulin, which is
wildly expensive. DCIN also provided the funding for Mittie's vet
visits once she was out of the shelter. Luckily, Mittie hasn't needed a
lot of additional veterinary attention, but that is not always the
case.

So on the list, we had items 1-4. Let's talk about #5,
transport. In many cases, adopters are WAY out of the area the cat is
in. In one example, a different diabetic (from the same shelter) had an
adopter all the way in Denver CO. Awesome, right? Only the cat was in
Northern Virginia. DCIN picked up the bill to fly that particular cat
nonstop to Denver. In cases where ground transport is feasible, DCIN's
transport folks will coordinate and monitor ground transportation to get
a cat to his or her forever home.

In Mittie's case, we got lucky *again*. My friend Linda Cork
- who had fostered Jules, the aforementioned kitty with a forever home
in Denver - contacted me and told me she needed a vacation. Since
Mittie needed to get up into the northeast to an area Linda loves, she
volunteered to take Mittie along the whole way.

Mittie started her journey to her forever loving home this morning at about 9:45am.

So the reason for this lengthy explanation - which really is the
anatomy of a special needs rescue - is to make the case for *why* DCIN
is deserving of you making a donation. Sight unseen, they committed to
Mittie's financial needs. All of them. Hundreds of dollars worth
(sometimes thousands if the kitty is in bad shape). There would have
been no way to pull Mittie - even though she had a local foster and a
forever home lined up - without that crucial piece. DCIN would have
further paid to fly Mittie to her forever home if we hadn't been lucky
enough to have a single ground transporter who decided to take a
vacation close to Mittie's adoptive forever home.

DCIN can't do
this without financial support. They can't. Without donations,
there's going to come a time when - being responsible - they are going
to have to say "no". Look at Mittie's sweet face in the pictures.
Imagine that we hadn't had what we needed to break her out. She would
have been dead over two weeks ago. She was so worth the effort - but if
DCIN can't provide financial commitment because they don't have the
donations needed, other equally deserving cats aren't going to have the
chance that Mittie did.

So please. It's tax deductible. It's a
great cause. You can *SEE* for yourselves below the result. If you
can, please donate so that DCIN can continue to save these special
lives: https://www.youcaring.com/dcin-634283.

Thanks for reading.

~Rena Fagel

Editor's note: This was originally posted on Rena's Facebook
page. She graciously gave me permission to use it as a guest post here.
~Amy

2 comments:

As a sign of gratitude for how my husband was saved from diabetes , i decided to reach out to those still suffering from this.My husband was diagnosed of diabetes and it was really tough and heartbreaking for me because he was my all and the symptoms were terrible, he had difficulty eating, and he always complain of stomach pain and he always Urinat often . we tried various therapies prescribed by our neurologist but none could cure him. I searched for a cure and i saw a testimony by someone who was cured and so many other with similar body problem, and he left the contact of the doctor who had the cure to diabetes . I never imagine diabetes has a cure not until i contacted him and he assured me my husband will be fine. I got the herbal medication he recommended and my husband used it and in one months he was fully okay even up till this moment he is so full of life. diabetes has a cure and it is a herbal cure contact the doctor for more info on drwilliams098765@gmail.com on how to get the medication. Thanks for reading my testimony